Misplaced Pages

Politics: Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively
Next edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 12:28, 4 November 2001 edit193.150.238.xxx (talk)No edit summary  Revision as of 15:17, 24 November 2001 edit undoHagedis (talk | contribs)3 editsm linkNext edit →
Line 101: Line 101:
:'''Miscellaneous:''' :'''Miscellaneous:'''


:] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ]-- ] -- ] -- ] :] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ] -- ]-- ] -- ] -- ]





Revision as of 15:17, 24 November 2001

Politics is the study of decision-making power at the societal

level. Specifically, it is the study of systems of government and

how people acquire and exercise power in those systems.


In addition to government, journalists,

religious groups, special interest groups, and economic

systems and conditions may all have influence on decisions.

Therefore, politics touches on all these subjects.


Studies of politics have both reflected and influenced the political

systems of the world. Niccolo Machiavelli wrote The Prince,

an amoral analysis of politics in a monarchy, in 1513, while living in

a monarchy. Karl Marx and Friedrich Engels wrote

The Communist Manifesto in 1848 and it went on to be one of the

most influential works of the twentieth century. Today, much study of

politics focuses on democracies, and how their form

affects the decisions they make.


Other lines of political inquiry attempt to answer

philosophical questions: is there a moral

justification for government? What is

the purpose of government?


Political science


In the United States political scientists look at elections, public opinion (on matters ranging from Social Security reform to foreign policy), institutional activities (how congress acts, where congressional power gravitates toward, how and when the Supreme Court acted, or didnt act, etc) and a variety of other data to try to figure out what the next move of soceity or government would be.



Political Systems and Ideologies:
Anarchism -- Anarcho-capitalism -- Capitalism -- Communism -- Conservatism -- Democracy -- Liberalism -- Libertarianism -- Libertarian socialism --Marxism -- Minarchism -- Nationalism -- National Socialism -- Oligarchy -- Republicanism -- Socialism -- Corporocracy


Sector-Based Ideologies:
Masculism


Political Entities:
City -- Country -- Government -- Republic -- State


Political philosophy:
The justification of the state -- Anarchism and natural law theory -- Social contract theories -- Raw is moral philosophy -- Consequentialist justifications of the state -- The purpose of government


Classical and modern political theorists:
Plato -- Aristotle
Mustafa Kemal Ataturk -- John Locke -- Karl Marx -- John Stuart Mill -- Jean-Jacques Rousseau -- Johann Gottfried von Herder


Contemporary Political Theorists:
David Friedman -- Noam Chomsky


Electoral Systems:
Election--Voting system--Proportional representation--Tactical voting


Miscellaneous:
International organization -- Corporate Police State -- Crony capitalism -- European Union -- Police -- Propaganda -- U.S. Politics -- Political spectrum -- Political Party-- Political parties of the world -- Techno-democracy -- Techno-oligarchy



/Wanted (Authors, please read!)


/Talk